Monday, September 5, 2016

Claude Hopkins - Safari Stomp

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 63:51
Size: 146.2 MB
Styles: Piano jazz
Year: 2002
Art: Front

[4:08] 1. I Would Do Anything For You
[4:55] 2. Crying Out My Heart For You
[4:09] 3. Struttin' With Some Barbecue
[6:19] 4. Nice Blues
[4:31] 5. Them There Eyes
[3:25] 6. Poor Butterfly
[4:01] 7. Safari Stomp
[3:53] 8. I'm Coming Virginia
[3:41] 9. Who's Sorry Now
[4:02] 10. Cute
[2:39] 11. Struttin' With Some Barbecue
[4:23] 12. I Got It Bad (And That Ain't Good)
[3:14] 13. It's Wonderful
[3:34] 14. Safari Stomp
[4:11] 15. Cute
[2:40] 16. Struttin' With Some Barbecue

Followed only by Sophisticated Swing, a live album captured at Virginia's Manassas Jazz Festival in December 1974, Safari Stomp was hatched in Valaurisis, France six months earlier on July 17 and appears to constitute pianist and bandleader Claude Hopkins' very last studio recording. Originally released as Black & Blue by the Black & Blue record label, the album's 2003 reissue adds previously omitted titles "Cute," "It's Wonderful," "Who's Sorry Now," and "I Got It Bad (And That Ain't Good)" along with several juicy alternate takes. Hopkins, whose recording career began in 1922, is heard in relaxed communion with Louis Armstrong's longtime bassist Arvell Shaw and master percussionist Jo Jones, a cardinal member of the Count Basie Orchestra from 1935-1948. This intimate and pleasantly casual outing compares nicely with latter-day trio recordings by Hopkins' colleagues Duke Ellington and Earl Fatha Hines. Hopkins' music is recommended for tooling around in your ride or preparing a big meal for trusted friends and family. ~arwulf arwulf

Safari Stomp

Lorraine Feather - Cafe Society

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 52:00
Size: 119.1 MB
Styles: Vocal jazz
Year: 2003
Art: Front

[5:25] 1. Café Society
[2:49] 2. We're Rockin' In Rhythm
[3:00] 3. The Speed Of Light
[3:36] 4. Jungle Rhythm
[5:07] 5. Love Call
[4:22] 6. The Right Idea
[3:32] 7. Something Like My Own
[4:52] 8. Big Fun
[4:14] 9. Hot Coffee
[5:20] 10. Days Of Old
[4:26] 11. The Green Flash
[5:11] 12. The Way We Say Goodbye

It's taken nearly two years for prodigious jazz progeny Lorraine Feather to oblige us with a follow up to her terrific Fats Waller tribute, New York City Drag. The wait, it turns out, has been well worthwhile. Last time around, Feather shaped superb lyrics to fit 12 Waller classics. With Cafe Society, she does the same on a broader scale, refitting tunes from an even dozen composers-Charlie Barnet, Duke Ellington and Johnny Mandel among them-with sassy new lyrics. Feather's intent is, it seems, to pay spirited homage to the prebop sophistication of her legendary parents (big band singer Jane and fabled critic Leonard). When, in the title tune, she pines for "those legendary days" and wishes "with all my heart [that] I could be at Cafe Society," it's easy to picture her mother at the microphone in some smoky Manhattan den while her father sits ringside.

New York City Drag was fun and inventive in a mellow, understated way. Here, Feather is decidedly more boisterous, swinging like an Andrews Sister through Ellington and Harry Carney's "Rockin' in Rhythm" and going wildly native on both the deliciously overblown "Big Fun" and the tropically syncopated "Jungle Rhythm" (featured in Disney's latest animated epic, The Jungle Book 2). She also has a whale of a time breezing through Barnet and Skippy Martin's "The Right Idea," a playfully romantic adventure reminiscent of "Let's Get Lost." Her spirited high jinks are, however, gorgeously offset by such velvety additions as Mandel's "Speed of Light" (sort of a gently heated Afro-Cuban version of "You've Got a Friend") and a sultry "Love Call" (from Ellington's "Creole Love Call") that recalls the sexy insouciance of Lee Wiley. Most remarkable, though, is "The Way We Say Goodbye," a soaring salute to torchiness that underscores the melancholic Sturm und Drang of "Black Coffee" with the philosophic mistiness of Cole Porter's "Every Time We Say Goodbye." ~Christopher Loudon

Cafe Society

Jon Johnson - Daydreamer

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 38:09
Size: 87.4 MB
Styles: Blues/Jazz guitar
Year: 2016
Art: Front

[3:49] 1. Light Up The World
[3:18] 2. The Glass House
[3:49] 3. Underline
[3:44] 4. Daydreamer
[4:20] 5. Amends
[3:12] 6. Find My Way
[3:53] 7. Welcome To Wanderland
[4:05] 8. Wonderful Tonight
[4:00] 9. A Day Light
[3:56] 10. Fade To Grey

I'm 32 years old from Portland OR. I've been Playing Guitar for 20 years, and Playing in Bands Since I was 14. I have Toured the Country and played Packed Venues, as well as performing in, half empty, Local Coffee Shops.

My First Solo Full Length Album is an Instrumental Guitar Album based around Melody and Soul Expression. A Journey through the Paths of Life told Without Lyrics, only Contemporary Sounds.

Daydreamer

Little Richard - The Georgia Peach

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 57:42
Size: 132.1 MB
Styles: R&B, Rock N Roll
Year: 1991
Art: Front

[2:22] 1. Tutti Frutti
[2:04] 2. Baby
[2:35] 3. I'm Just A Lonely Guy
[2:40] 4. True Fine Mama
[2:37] 5. Kansas City Hey-Hey-Hey-Hey!
[2:40] 6. Slippin' And Slidin'
[2:07] 7. Long Tall Sally
[2:14] 8. Miss Ann
[2:07] 9. Oh Why
[2:07] 10. Ready Teddy
[2:04] 11. Hey Hey Hey Hey
[2:21] 12. Rip It Up
[2:23] 13. Lucille
[2:14] 14. Heeby Jeebies
[2:25] 15. Can't Believe You Wanna Leave
[2:47] 16. Shake A Hand
[2:25] 17. All Around The World
[2:24] 18. She's Got It
[2:01] 19. Jenny, Jenny
[2:08] 20. Good Golly Miss Molly
[2:29] 21. The Girl Can't Help It
[2:17] 22. Send Me Some Lovin'
[1:51] 23. Ooh! My Soul
[2:16] 24. Keep A Knockin'
[1:50] 25. Whole Lotta Shakin' Going On

One of the definitive Little Richard anthologies, Specialty Records' 25-track Georgia Peach brings together all of Richard's hits in chronological order, along with several lesser-known, if no less top-notch, singles. These are the recordings Richard built his career upon and they showcase his most stripped-down, rockin', rhythm & blues-oriented sound. Although he had already recorded for RCA in the early '50s (anthologized on Bear Family Records' superb The Formative Years: 1951-53), it was his sides for Specialty Records, recorded between 1955 and 1959, that codified his distinctive, revelatory approach to rock & roll; roiling barroom piano, unhinged falsetto vocals and lyrics full of cheeky innuendo just this side of dirty. Included here are such classic recordings as "Tutti Frutti," "Good Golly Miss Molly," Slippin' and Slidin'," "Long Tall Sally," "Jenny, Jenny, Jenny," and more. Also included are such lesser appreciated, but no less incendiary cuts as "Heebie Jeebies," "She's Got It," and "Rip It Up," among others. If you are looking for a collection that brings together a cross-section of Richard's most definitive early career sides, then look no further than Georgia Peach. ~Matt Collar

The Georgia Peach

Gary McFarland - Soft Samba

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 28:56
Size: 66.2 MB
Styles: Bossa Nova, Latin jazz
Year: 1964/2015
Art: Front

[1:45] 1. Ringo
[2:33] 2. From Russia With Love
[2:16] 3. She Loves You
[3:03] 4. A Hard Day's Night
[2:04] 5. The Good Life
[2:18] 6. More
[3:55] 7. And I Love Her
[1:57] 8. The Love Goddess
[3:13] 9. I Want To Hold Your Hand
[1:51] 10. Emily
[1:53] 11. California, Here I Come
[2:03] 12. La Vie En Rose

Acoustic Guitar – Antonio Carlos Jobim; Bass – Richard Davis; Flute – Seldon Powell, Spencer Sinatra; Guitar – Kenny Burrell; Percussion – Sol Gubin, Willie Bobo; Piano – Patty Bowen; Trombone – Jimmy Cleveland. Recorded June15-16, September 3, October7, 1964, at Van Gelder Recording Studios, NJ.

Gary McFarland's profile was rising in jazz as an arranger and producer, having already crafted respected albums with artists such as Bill Evans. This album was perceived as a step in more commercial directions, what with its covers of Beatles tunes, film themes, and all. This didn't make it popular with jazz critics of the time, generally known for being snobby, anyways. Now that Gary McFarland is being increasingly remembered, there are similarly increasing numbers of McFarland-related reissues like this to be found. It is generally accepted that his follow-up --- The In Sound --- is the better album, but don't let that knowledge cause you to overlook Soft Samba!

Soft Samba may not have Gabor Szabo, but it does have Kenny Burrell and Antonio Carlos Jobim on guitar. It has Willie Bobo on percussion. It has "yeah, yeah, yeah" as the only readily identifiable lyrics on an album otherwise full of vocals. For these reasons and more, please introduce yourself to this album and to the thoroughly enjoyable repertoire of Gary McFarland. ~Panko Morton

Soft Samba

Girls From Mars - Planet Swing

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 45:34
Size: 104.3 MB
Styles: Retro Swing
Year: 1999
Art: Front

[3:08] 1. Jitter Joe
[2:45] 2. It Don't Mean A Thing (If It Ain't Got That Swing)
[3:39] 3. Stompin' At The Savoy
[3:47] 4. What A Little Moonlight Can Do
[3:05] 5. Spring Cleaning
[2:26] 6. Killin' Jive
[2:39] 7. Crazy People
[4:32] 8. Evening
[3:16] 9. Free Eats
[3:02] 10. Bei Mir Bist Du Schoen
[3:18] 11. Salute To Harlem
[3:20] 12. Straighten Up And Fly Right
[2:57] 13. One Is Never Too Old To Swing
[3:32] 14. We Just Couldn't Say Goodbye

Girls from Mars capture the essence of a music that was born in smoky bars in the 1930's. True to that tradition, their intuitive harmonies are a joyous remembrance of the swing era. Material includes songs recorded by: The Boswell Sisters, Cats 'n the Fiddle, The Mills Brothers, Ella Fitzgerald, The Andrews Sisters, Louis Armstrong.

Wendi Bourne, Lauren Jansen and Annie Patterson are the core of the group. Singing together since 1983, they have developed a way of singing together that is truly inspiring for everyone who loves great singing and a groovin' beat! Swing music is their true love, as is evident on their recording, Planet Swing. THE BAND is made up of: Wendi Bourne (guitar/vocal), Lauren Jansen (snare/vocal), Annie Patterson (vocal), Ralph Gordon (bass), Steve Jones & Tom Petroski (piano), Paul Grant (tpt) and Paul Butler (clarinet).

Planet Swing

Barbara Dennerlein - In a Silent Mood

Styles: Jazz, Hard Bop, Post-Bop 
Year: 2007
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 55:46
Size: 127,9 MB
Art: Front

(6:44)  1. Home Is Where My Heart Is
(9:36)  2. Always Remember
(7:13)  3. When You're Looking Back
(5:52)  4. Last Call
(7:59)  5. I Miss You
(9:07)  6. Precious Moments
(6:28)  7. Lost Friends
(2:44)  8. Reflections

German Hammond B-3 innovator Barbara Dennerlein not only doesn't sound like Jimmy Smith on In a Silent Mood, it is really doubtful that these tracks could even be called jazz. A tranquil suite to the power of the inner life, In a Silent Mood is made up of carefully composed segments that stand individually on their own, but taken together, form a complete whole. Using only her B-3 here (and the occasional piano), and outfitted with foot pedals that trip her MIDI synthesizer settings, Dennerlein has assembled a beautiful album that glides and reaches into the rare, thin atmosphere of dreams.

As much as Smith defined the possibilities of the B-3 at the end of the 20th century, Dennerlein is beginning to define it for the 21st. ~ Steve Leggett http://www.allmusic.com/album/in-a-silent-mood-mw0001084946

In a Silent Mood

Jacky Terrasson Jazz Trio - Lover Man

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1993
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 53:51
Size: 123,7 MB
Art: Front

(5:18)  1. Donna Lee
(4:35)  2. Nardis
(2:22)  3. First Child
(9:43)  4. In Your Own Sweet Way
(2:15)  5. Wall
(7:09)  6. Lost
(5:50)  7. Broadway
(7:43)  8. Lover Man
(2:29)  9. Close Enough For Love
(6:24) 10. Love For Sale

Jacky Terrasson finds new routes into familiar compositions on these 1993 sessions for the Japanese Venus label. Well accompanied by bassist Ugonna Okegwo and drummer Leon Parker, the pianist dives head first into a rousing, if unusual version of Charlie Parker's "Donna Lee," initially kicking off an explosive vamp to play against its theme, though he eventually discards the vamp in favor of a more conventional, though thoroughly post-bop approach to this bop classic. Likewise, Terrasson introduces Miles Davis with a good bit of drama, even if he is more direct in his improvised introduction than Bill Evans was in his final years. The pianist's arrangement of Dave Brubeck's "In Your Own Sweet Way" is particularly haunting, with his surprising chords in the bassline, then eases up a bit as he gets into a funky mood. Terrasson has just as much fun with standards like "Broadway" and "Love for Sale," while also proving himself as a promising composer with two strong originals. ~ Ken Dryden http://www.allmusic.com/album/lover-man-mw0000520805

Personnel:  Jacky Terrasson – piano;  Ugonna Okegwo – bass;  Leon Parker - drums

Lover Man

Gary Burton / Chick Corea - Crystal Silence

Styles: Vibraphone And Piano Jazz
Year: 1973
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 44:32
Size: 103,3 MB
Art: Front

(6:21)  1. Senor Mouse
(5:09)  2. Arise, Her Eyes
(4:03)  3. I'm Your Pal
(6:26)  4. Desert Air
(9:06)  5. Crystal Silence
(2:43)  6. Falling Grace
(4:45)  7. Feelings And Things
(2:11)  8. Childrens Song
(3:44)  9. What Game Shall We Play Today

For Crystal Silence, the first of several partnerships between Chick Corea and vibraphonist Gary Burton in the 1970s, the two musicians selected an interesting array of material. The compositions on this record are all modern ones, either by Steve Swallow, Mike Gibbs, or Corea himself. It is a mostly downtempo affair, which allows each player to stretch out and play highly melodic solos over the often difficult changes. In keeping with most ECM releases, there is a distinct presence of European elements to the improvisations. There are few overt blues or bebop phrases, Corea and Burton opting instead for modern melodies to fuel their improvisations. Burton has managed to internalize the Spanish and modal implications of Corea's tunes with little difficulty, and solos with joyful ease through such tracks as "Señor Mouse." Corea himself is absolutely burning. His solo contribution on the same track is both fiery and introspective, combining in one statement the poles for which he is best-known. The title track is also the centerpiece of the album, a nine-minute exploration of the Corea ballad that first appeared on his Return to Forever record in 1972. In keeping with the tradition of the great masters of the ballad form, time seems to disappear as Burton and Corea lovingly caress the song's simple melody and dance effortlessly around the chords, building intensity only to let it subside once more. Crystal Silence is a sublime indication of what two master improvisers can do given quality raw material, with the first side of this record being particularly flawless. Improvised music is rarely this coherent and melodic. Essential for fans of Corea, Burton, or jazz in general. ~ Daniel Gioffre http://www.allmusic.com/album/crystal-silence-mw0000198910

Personnel: Chick Corea (piano); Gary Burton (vibraphone).

Crystal Silence

Daniel Freedman - Bamako By Bus

Styles: Jazz, Bop
Year: 2012
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 53:38
Size: 123,8 MB
Art: Front

(1:53)  1. Odudua featuring Abraham Rodriguez
(6:23)  2. Elegba Wa featuring Lionel Loueke
(5:55)  3. Deep Brooklyn
(5:15)  4. Rumba Pa' NYC featuring Abraham Rodriguez and Pedro Martinez
(5:40)  5. Alona featuring Mark Turner
(9:00)  6. All Brothers featuring Lionel Loueke
(6:40)  7. Darfur/Oasis featuring Joshua Levitt
(6:43)  8. Sa'aba featuring Mark Turner and Avishai Cohen
(6:05)  9. Bamako By Bus featuring Lionel Loueke

The sophomore release for drummer Daniel Freedman could simply be retitled Passion and not be too far off the mark. To be this comfortable with who you are and where you are going is a gift but to pull off the same passion as an artist is a thing of rare beauty. Freedman is a first call world class percussionist having been heard on recorded works with such luminaries as Sting, Tom Harrell and Youssou N' Dour. Bamako By Bus is a stunning release as it fuses a myriad of influences that range from jazz to African, Cuban, funk and pop and the end result is a stunning new land of sonic texture and feeling. Welcome to the land of rhythm and groove! A highly personal recording of a musicians inner vision of where another journey may well start but the end is not specifically laid out but left up to the listener and Freedman. Bamako By Bus is also meant to confirm that New York City is indeed the mecca of the jazz universe with musicians coming together from all over the world to pool their collective talents.

Music was specifically written with certain players in mind but there is united core of Meshell Ndegeocello on bass, the incredible Avishai Cohen on trumpet, Jason Linder on keyboards and of course Daniel Freedman handling the duties behind the kit. There are virtually too many highlights to list in their entirety including the most under rated saxophonist on the planet Mark Turner and his musical union with the haunting and gorgeous ballad "Alona." Perhaps a personal favorite would be the sonic fire power of Ndegeocello and Linder taking funk to the next level while Avishai Cohen lays down a jaw dropping solo showcasing his ability not to simply blow but play with lyrical purpose and direction as do all participants here. Rumba Pa' NYC is old school, music celebrating the time that culture filled the streets and the air with the rhythmic intoxication that is Cuban music. The wide range of influence from global sources is staggering. Yoruba Afro-Cuban prayer chant, mixed with a subtle splash of Regga; rumba; Afro-Moroccan Gnawa music merged with Brazilian grooves; and the West African Malian tones that balance the title track. The title track as much of the release itself, inspired by an arduous 30 hour bus trip the young Freedman took in Mali. Freedman's musical adventures have taken his prolific talents to West Africa, The Middle East and Cuba.Texture, timbre and tone but from the other musicians are the emphasis on this stunning release. Freedman does what the premier drummers do, he pushes the music to center stage and lets the ensemble play out while not remaining comfortable but owning the pocket. Phrasing, dynamics and harmonic placement are done with the ensemble in mind. At no time does Bamako By Bus become a self indulgent percussive bash fest any more than Feldman being something other than a human metronome.
A stellar work. One of the best releases for 2012. 5 Stars! http://www.criticaljazz.com/2012/04/daniel-freedman-bamako-by-bus-anzic.html

Personnel: 
Avishai Cohen – trumpet, Lionel Loueke – guitar and vocals, Jason Lindner – keyboards, Meshell Ndegeocello – bass, Omer Avital – acoustic bass (track 7), Daniel Freedman – drums, percussion, Pedrito Martinez, Abraham Rodriguez – vocals and percussion, Mark Turner – tenor saxophone.                                                                         

Bamako By Bus